// Ionic Starter App

// angular.module is a global place for creating, registering and retrieving Angular modules
// 'starter' is the name of this angular module example (also set in a <body> attribute in index.html)
// the 2nd parameter is an array of 'requires'
// 'starter.services' is found in services.js
// 'starter.controllers' is found in controllers.js
angular.module('starter', ['ionic', 'starter.controllers', 'starter.services','ngCordova'])

.run(function($ionicPlatform) {
  $ionicPlatform.ready(function() {
    // Hide the accessory bar by default (remove this to show the accessory bar above the keyboard
    // for form inputs).
    // The reason we default this to hidden is that native apps don't usually show an accessory bar, at
    // least on iOS. It's a dead giveaway that an app is using a Web View. However, it's sometimes
    // useful especially with forms, though we would prefer giving the user a little more room
    // to interact with the app.
    if (window.cordova && window.Keyboard) {
      window.Keyboard.hideKeyboardAccessoryBar(true);
    }

    if (window.StatusBar) {
      // Set the statusbar to use the default style, tweak this to
      // remove the status bar on iOS or change it to use white instead of dark colors.
      StatusBar.styleDefault();
    }
  });
})

.config(function($stateProvider, $urlRouterProvider,$ionicConfigProvider) {
  $ionicConfigProvider.platform.ios.tabs.style('standard');
  $ionicConfigProvider.platform.ios.tabs.position('bottom');
  $ionicConfigProvider.platform.android.tabs.style('standard');
  $ionicConfigProvider.platform.android.tabs.position('bottom');

  $ionicConfigProvider.platform.ios.navBar.alignTitle('center');
  $ionicConfigProvider.platform.android.navBar.alignTitle('center');

  $ionicConfigProvider.platform.ios.backButton.previousTitleText('').icon('ion-ios-arrow-thin-left');
  $ionicConfigProvider.platform.android.backButton.previousTitleText('').icon('ion-android-arrow-back');

  $ionicConfigProvider.platform.ios.views.transition('ios');
  $ionicConfigProvider.platform.android.views.transition('android');

  // Ionic uses AngularUI Router which uses the concept of states
  // Learn more here: https://github.com/angular-ui/ui-router
  // Set up the various states which the app can be in.
  // Each state's controller can be found in controllers.js
  $stateProvider

  // setup an abstract state for the tabs directive
    .state('tab', {
    url: '/tab',
    abstract: true,
    templateUrl: 'templates/tabs.html'
  })

  // Each tab has its own nav history stack:

  .state('tab.home', {
    url: '/home',
    views: {
      'tab-home': {
        templateUrl: 'templates/tabHome/tab-home.html',
        controller: 'HomeCtrl'
      }
    }
  })

  .state('tab.category', {
      url: '/category',
      views: {
        'tab-category': {
          templateUrl: 'templates/tabCategory/tab-category.html',
          controller: 'CategoryCtrl'
        }
      }
    })
    .state('tab.category-detail', {
      url: '/category/:chatId',
      views: {
        'tab-category': {
          templateUrl: 'templates/tabCategory/categoryDetail/category-detail.html',
          controller: 'ChatDetailCtrl'
        }
      }
    })
    .state('tab.cart', {
      url: '/cart',
      views: {
        'tab-cart': {
          templateUrl: 'templates/tabCart/tab-cart.html',
          controller: 'CartCtrl'
        }
      }
    })

  .state('tab.account', {
    url: '/account',
    views: {
      'tab-account': {
        templateUrl: 'templates/tabAccount/tab-account.html',
        controller: 'AccountCtrl'
      }
    }
  });

  // if none of the above states are matched, use this as the fallback
  $urlRouterProvider.otherwise('/tab/home');

});
